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Pulitzer-winning graphic memoir traces three generations of trauma, identity and survival across continents and ideologies.
The graphic memoir shows how histories, both global and within families, shape how we are formed and what we become.
Copeland Lilley, a poet, first came to Port Townsend as faculty in 2008 and moved to the area in 2009. He said he was charmed by the area and came to learn it is populated by great writers.
Hulls’s epic, elegantly etched graphic memoir debut tangles with trauma’s long tentacles as she follows three generations of her family from Mao’s China to Hong Kong in the 1960s and ...
From memoirs to horror and everything in between, graphic novels entertain, inform or even scare readers with their striking ...
Evelyn Bernard (Hamilton-Wenham) Reese Bromby (Newburyport) Kassidy Carmichael (Westford Academy) Brigid Carovillano ...
By Matt Dowell This 2025 Pulitzer finalist wrote her novel in a Capitol Hill coworking space. This 2025 Pulitzer Prize winner once made Volunteer Park her studio. Tessa Hulls is always on ...
More than half of Thames Water's sewage treatment works are unable to deal with the volume of sewage they receive, ...
Fending off what would have been the biggest rebellion of his premiership, Sir Keir Starmer’s Government won the vote, with ...
Guy Delisle, Jeff Lemire, Kay Sohini, Joanna Rubin Dranger, Chris Thompson and more have compelling graphic novels based in real-life events.
West Marin native Tessa Hulls is behind “Feeding Ghosts,” her graphic memoir that recently won a Pulitzer Prize. (Photo by Hall Anderson) ...